Difference between revisions of "Basics : Install Eclipse Plugins Fedora"

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(Starting Eclipse for the First Time)
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When starting Eclipse you are prompted for the directory that will hold your projects. The default directory is called workspace.[[Image:Screenshot.png|thumb]]
 
When starting Eclipse you are prompted for the directory that will hold your projects. The default directory is called workspace.[[Image:Screenshot.png|thumb]]
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Your first screen is the welcome window. Also, notice the prompt asking if you'd like to send your Eclipse usage statistics to the Subeclipse team. You can decline by clicking cancel or accept by clicking OK. The welcome window offers new Eclipse users opportunities to view an overview of Eclipse, work through tutorials, try sample programs and to find out what's new with this version of Eclipse. For now just close the welcome window.[[Image:Screenshot-1.png|thumb]]
 
Your first screen is the welcome window. Also, notice the prompt asking if you'd like to send your Eclipse usage statistics to the Subeclipse team. You can decline by clicking cancel or accept by clicking OK. The welcome window offers new Eclipse users opportunities to view an overview of Eclipse, work through tutorials, try sample programs and to find out what's new with this version of Eclipse. For now just close the welcome window.[[Image:Screenshot-1.png|thumb]]
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Revision as of 12:37, 18 January 2011

Installing Eclipse onto Fedora 14 - X86_64

  1. Start with a clean install of Fedora 14, preferably from a live CD. For my examples I used the 64 bit edition.
  2. When the install is complete, open a terminal window and run yum update to bring your system up to date. You may have to reboot once this is done.
  3. Install Eclipse (Helios 3.6.1) with the command yum groupinstall "Fedora Eclipse".
  4. That's it! You can now use Eclipse to build C, C++ or Java programs.

Starting Eclipse for the First Time

When starting Eclipse you are prompted for the directory that will hold your projects. The default directory is called workspace.
Screenshot.png





Your first screen is the welcome window. Also, notice the prompt asking if you'd like to send your Eclipse usage statistics to the Subeclipse team. You can decline by clicking cancel or accept by clicking OK. The welcome window offers new Eclipse users opportunities to view an overview of Eclipse, work through tutorials, try sample programs and to find out what's new with this version of Eclipse. For now just close the welcome window.
Screenshot-1.png





This is the Eclipse IDE (Integrated Development Environment) otherwise known as the Workbench. The Workbench contains a menu bar and several smaller windows called Views.
Screenshot-2.png